Safedry Restoration

Water Damage Restoration

When your home is being threatened by water damage from flooding or leaks, Safedry Restoration Professionals have the expertise to prevent or mitigate the devastating effects water damage can have in order to help preserve and restore your property.

Fire Damage Restoration

Fire damage can be extensive and traumatic. During these times we are leaders in fire restoration. We can handle any commercial or residential fire no matter the size.

Smoke damage is also a large part of fire cleanup. Soot can ruin personal property even if it was not affected by the fire. Being soot and smoke restoration experts, let us at Safe Dry Restoration be the professionals who return your property back to normal.

MOLD REMEDIATION

There may be mold growing in your home. Like all fungi, mold feeds on the organic materials that can be found on non-synthetic surface areas that contain moisture. Our experienced team of Certified Professionals can find pockets of hidden mold that may be causing serious harm.

Pressure Differential: The design parameters for static pressure differentials between the inside and outside of enclosures typically range from 0.02 to 0.10 inches of water gauge, depending on conditions. All zones inside the enclosure must have less pressure than the ambient pressure outside of the How To Remove Asbestos Pipe Insulation enclosure (-0.02 inches water gauge differential).

Design specifications for the differential vary according to the size, configuration, and shape of the enclosure as well as ambient and mechanical air reassure conditions around the How To Remove Asbestos Pipe Insulation enclosure. Air Flow Patterns: The flow of air past each worker shall be enhanced by positioning the intakes and exhaust ports to remove contaminated air from the worker's breathing zone.

By positioning HEPA vacuum cleaners to draw air from the worker's breathing zone, by forcing relatively uncontaminated air past the worker toward an exhaust port, or by using a combination of How To Remove Asbestos Pipe Insulation methods to reduce the worker's exposure.

Air Handling Unit Exhaust: The exhaust plume from air handling units should be located away from adjacent personnel and intakes for HVAC systems. Air Flow Volume: The air flow volume (cubic meters per minute) exhausted (removed) from the workplace must exceed the amount of makeup air supplied to the How To Remove Asbestos Pipe Insulation enclosure.

The rate of air exhausted from the enclosure should be designed to maintain a negative pressure in the enclosure and air movement past each worker. The volume of air flow removed from the How To Remove Asbestos Pipe Insulation enclosure should replace the volume of the container at every 5 to 15 minutes.

Air flow volume will need to be relatively high for large enclosures, How To Remove Asbestos Pipe Insulation enclosures with awkward shapes, enclosures with multiple openings, and operations employing several workers in the enclosure. Air Flow Velocity: At each opening, the air flow velocity must visibly "drag" air into the enclosure.

The velocity of air flow within the How To Remove Asbestos Pipe Insulation enclosure must be adequate to remove airborne contamination from each worker's breathing zone without disturbing the asbestos-containing material on surfaces. Airlocks: Airlocks are mechanisms on doors and curtains that control the air flow patterns in the doorways.

If air flow occurs, the patterns through doorways must be such that the air flows toward the inside of the How To Remove Asbestos Pipe Insulation enclosure. Sometimes vestibules, double doors, or double curtains are used to prevent air movement through the doorways.

To use a vestibule, a worker enters a chamber by opening the door or curtain and then closing the entry before opening the exit door or curtain. Airlocks should be located between the equipment room and shower room, between the shower room and the clean room, and between the waste storage area and the outside of the How To Remove Asbestos Pipe Insulation enclosure.

The air flow between adjacent rooms must be checked using smoke tubes or other visual tests to ensure the flow patterns draw air toward the work area without producing eddies. Monitoring for Airborne Concentrations In addition to the breathing zone samples taken as outlined in paragraph (f) of this How To Remove Asbestos Pipe Insulation section.

Samples of air should be taken to demonstrate the integrity of the How To Remove Asbestos Pipe Insulation enclosure, the cleanliness of the clean room and shower area, and the effectiveness of the HEPA filter. If the clean room is shown to be contaminated, the room must be relocated to an uncontaminated area. Samples taken near the exhaust of portable ventilation systems must be done with care.

General Work Practices Preventing dust dispersion is the primary means of controlling the spread of asbestos within the enclosure. Whenever practical, the point of How To Remove Asbestos Pipe Insulation removal should be isolated, enclosed, covered, or shielded from the workers in the area.

Waste asbestos containing materials must be bagged during or immediately after removal; the material must remain saturated until the How To Remove Asbestos Pipe Insulation waste container is sealed. Waste material with sharp points or corners must be placed in hard air-tight containers rather than bags. Whenever possible, large components should be sealed in plastic sheeting and removed intact.

Bags or containers of waste will be moved to the waste holding area, washed, and wrapped in a bag with the appropriate labels. Cleaning the How To Remove Asbestos Pipe Insulation Work Area Surfaces within the work area should be kept free of visible dust and debris to the extent feasible.

Whenever visible dust appears on surfaces, the surfaces within the enclosure must be cleaned by wiping with a wet sponge, brush, or cloth and then vacuumed with a HEPA vacuum. All surfaces within the How To Remove Asbestos Pipe Insulation enclosure should be cleaned before the exhaust ventilation system is deactivated and the enclosure is disassembled.

An approved encapsulant may be sprayed onto areas after the visible dust has been removed. The following How To Remove Asbestos Pipe Insulation organizations provide smoking cessation information. 1. The National Cancer Institute operates a toll-free Cancer Information Service (CIS) with trained personnel to help you.

The American Cancer Society (ACS) is a voluntary organization composed of 58 divisions and 3,100 local units. Through "The Great American Smokeout" in November, the annual Cancer Crusade in April, and numerous How To Remove Asbestos Pipe Insulation educational materials, ACS helps people learn about the health hazards of smoking and become successful ex-smokers.

American Heart Association, 7320 Greenville Avenue, Dallas, Texas 75231, (214)750-5300. The American Heart Association (AHA) is a voluntary How To Remove Asbestos Pipe Insulation organization with 130,000 members (physicians, scientists, and laypersons) in 55 state and regional groups. AHA produces a variety of publications and audiovisual materials about the effects of smoking on the heart.

AHA also has developed a guidebook for incorporating a weight-control component into smoking cessation programs. 4. American Lung Association, 1740 Broadway, New York, New York 10019, (212)245-8000. A voluntary organization of 7,500 members (physicians, nurses, and laypersons), the American Lung Association (ALA) conducts numerous public How To Remove Asbestos Pipe Insulation information programs about the health effects of smoking.

ALA has 59 state and 85 local units. The organization actively supports legislation and How To Remove Asbestos Pipe Insulation information campaigns for non-smokers' rights and provides help for smokers who want to quit, for example, through "Freedom From Smoking," a self-help smoking cessation program.

Office on Smoking and Health, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, 5600 Fishers Lane, Park Building, Room 110, Rockville, Maryland 20857. How To Remove Asbestos Pipe Insulation The Office on Smoking and Health (OSH) is the Department of Health and Human Services' lead agency in smoking control.

OSH has sponsored distribution of How To Remove Asbestos Pipe Insulation publications on smoking-related topics, such as free flyers on relapse after initial quitting, helping a friend or family member quit smoking, the health hazards of smoking, and the effects of parental smoking on teenagers.

In Hawaii, on Oahu call 524-1234 (call collect from neighboring islands). Spanish-speaking How To Remove Asbestos Pipe Insulation staff members are available during daytime hours to callers from the following areas: California, Florida, Georgia, Illinois, New Jersey (area code 201), New York, and Texas. Consult your local telephone directory for listings of local chapters.

Lead-based house paint was commonly used in homes up until the late 1970s, and was particularly usual before the 1950s. The most customary places to find lead-based house paint are places where high strength is needed, like doors, door frames, windows, woodwork, and furniture. Lead-based house paint read more..

Do not enter the damaged site until the Bryan Fire Department gives you the OK. Fires can re-ignite from hidden, smoldering remains. Normally, the fire department will see that utilities (water, electricity and natural gas) are either safe to use or are disconnected before they leave the site. Do no read more..

Remodeling Your Home? Have You Considered Indoor Air Quality?Controlling Moisture Too much moisture in a home can lead to mold, mildew, and other biological growth. This in turn can lead to a variety of health effects ranging from more common allergic reactions, to asthma attacks, and hypersensitivi read more..

Appropriate follow-up medical examinations or consultations may also be provided for employees who have been temporarily removed from exposure under the medical removal protection provisions of the standard.(See Part IX, below.) The standard specifies the minimum content of pre-assignment and [ read more..

U.S. EPA National Radon Proficiency Program Handbook July 1996 vii EPA 402-R-95-013 DISCLAIMER This Handbook was prepared by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA or Agency). The purpose of this document is to provide applicants to and participants in the Radon Proficiency Program (RPP) with read more..

Mold has become a major source of concern related to health in the indoor environment. Molds are an important part of the natural environment and have been around for a long time. They are classified as part of the kingdom fungi being neither plant nor animal but a little of both and their role is t read more..

The forces of mother nature, the wind, water, earthquake and even the extremes of temperature could leave behind debris scattered places, contaminated water, spoiled food, displaced wildlife and overall conditions which, if not treated properly, might lead to major health problems. In t read more..

How Do You Know When You Have Finished Remediation/Cleanup? 1. You must have completely fixed the water or moisture problem.2. You should complete mold removal. Use professional judgment to determine if the cleanup is sufficient. Visible mold, mold-damaged materials, Mold Remediation UV Mold Remediation Mold Removal and moldy odors s read more..

Mold, mildew and bacteria are common following floods and other water damage. If unchecked they can lead to sanitation and health problems. The walls, floors, closets, shelves, contents-every flooded part of your house-should be thoroughly washed and disinfected.In most cases, Flood Damage Storm And High Flood Damage Prevention Plan household cleanin read more..